What EpisodePal fixes
- Exact episode memory instead of vague season-level guesses.
- A continue-watching flow that reflects what you are actually in the middle of.
- One place to see what you paused, what is next, and what airs soon.
EpisodePal is built for the most annoying TV problem: returning to a series after a few days or weeks and having no idea where you stopped. It keeps your exact episode progress, your up-next queue, and upcoming releases in one TV-only app.
Made for people who follow too many series to trust memory alone.
A lot of TV apps talk about recommendations and catalogs. Fine. But the recurring pain for heavy watchers is simpler: “Where exactly was I?” This page exists for that question.
EpisodePal is not trying to be an entertainment everything-app. It is trying to make the boring important part reliable.
Your active queue reflects the shows you are really in the middle of, not just a giant undifferentiated list.
EpisodePal stores the exact episode so you can reopen a series later and pick back up immediately.
Progress and upcoming episodes stay together, which matters if you are juggling current-week releases.
Use a tracker that stores exact episode progress instead of trusting memory or hoping the streaming app gets it right. That is exactly what EpisodePal is for.
Yes. It keeps active series, exact episode progress, and upcoming releases in one TV-only workflow.
Yes. EpisodePal supports TV Time, IMDb, TMDB, Trakt, and Simkl imports so switching does not mean starting from zero.
No. EpisodePal is TV-series only, which is part of why the queue stays cleaner and more useful for show-first watchers.
Free on iPhone. Import your history, fix your queue, and stop wasting time figuring out where you left off.
Download on the App Store